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July 23, 2007

Queued Editing in GeoMedia Pro 6.1

For those that use GeoMedia Fusion, this will all be familiar. For those that have never used GeoMedia Fusion, it’s a fantastic tool designed in large part to clean and validate data. With Fusion, all of your validation issues are loaded into a queue. In the queue you’re able to go through the edits one at a time, and do many different things including:

  • Make changes to the geometry
  • Add comments to the anomaly
  • Clean up the anomaly and add comments
  • Ignore the anomaly

With GeoMedia Pro 6.1, Intergraph has introduced this functionality into the core product as opposed to it only being available in GeoMedia Fusion. This means that if you have GeoMedia Fusion on one machine, you can create a queue and save it into a warehouse. Then you can hand off this queue (warehouse) to other people and they can review the anomalies identified by GeoMedia Fusion without tying up a license of GeoMedia Fusion.

Furthermore, Intergraph has begun to use the queue for other things like the new search command. I will try and cover this command later this week, but in general, it gives you a way to search through a feature class looking for an attribute. It’s basically a query without having to write any SQL.

With time I can see Intergraph use the queue for more and more functionality. In fact, I could have sworn they were using it for both the Validate Geometry and Validate Connectivity commands. HOWEVER, after reviewing GeoMedia Pro 6.1 while writing this post, I didn’t see the queue used anywhere in the two commands.

Posted in GeoMedia 6.1 Beta, Intergraph
4 Comments
  • PK

    Is GeoMedia Fusion used for ‘data entry’ for utility asset management ?

    Is GeoMedia Fusion fully included in 6.1 Pro (not needing to be purchased seperately) ?

    5:30 am July 30, 2008 Reply
  • No. Fusion is used for data cleanup (fixing overshoots, undershoots, etc), conflation, moving data from one source to another, and data checking. Overall, it’s a great tool for making sure data are setup the way YOU want them before importing/loading into your GIS.

    No, it’s not a part of GM Pro, but instead is a cost-based add-on.

    5:24 pm July 30, 2008 Reply
  • Kevin Holle

    They must be on to you Jeff, the link up top that shows a little about Fusion software got blasted.

    10:15 am August 8, 2008 Reply
  • Kevin,

    That’s too funny. I guess it was getting too many hits…didn’t want people to know about the product 🙁

    9:16 pm August 10, 2008 Reply
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